We thank Dr. Wu and colleagues for their careful reading of our manuscript and regret that they find our results difficult to understand. We have addressed each of their concerns below.Wu and colleagues point out that the median baseline nipple aspirate fluid (NAF) estradiol levels we reported in Supplementary Table S1 were considerably higher in treated postmenopausal women than in premenopausal (276.5 vs.116.4 pg/mL), but not in control women (110.8 vs. 104.2 pg/mL). They worry that this difference in NAF estradiol values between the soy and placebo postmenopausal groups may show a failure of randomization between the 2 groups. Although it is true that the value of 276.5 pg/mL is higher-than-expected for NAF estradiol in postmenopausal women, we do not agree that this indicates a failure of randomization. The general expectation that a randomly allocated population will be balanced in all characteristics is likely to fail in at least some characteristics when smaller subsets are examined. NAF data were available on approximately half the study population and therefore are not relevant to the issue of balanced randomization for the entire study. In fact, when we examine other parameters where data are available on the whole population, we find no differences between treated and placebo groups as indicated by the Wilcoxon rank-sum test and are shown in Table 1.Wu and colleagues also point out that we report postmenopausal NAF estradiol levels that are unexpectedly higher than premenopausal levels. When results in the present study are compared with our previous publications, it is true that estradiol concentrations in NAF have been consistently, but not significantly, lower in postmenopausal women than in premenopausal women. The number of postmenopausal subjects in our 2010 and 2004 publications was 18 in each (1, 2). The higher postmenopausal NAF estradiol concentrations in the present study (3), although unexpected, can be attributed to chance when the sample size is small, as it was here, with 8 NAF-yielding postmenopausal subjects in the soy group.With regard to the difference in NAF genistein values, it should again be noted that the summary values are based on 15 premenopausal and 8 postmenopausal observations; although the medians appear different between pre-and postmenopausal women, the major point of interest is that